Historical Texas Indians

Defining the historic
Indian tribes in Texas is not easy. Different tribes occupied different
regions at different times. This is why we have divided the subject
into Proto-historical, at the time of first contact with early explorers,
at the time of the Spanish missions and settlement, and contact after
1800s sections. The Proto-historical tribes are those found just prior
to and at first European contact. These are the tribes described by
DeSoto in 1542 and Cabeza de Vaca in 1535. They had changed dramatically
by the time of the Spanish missions. Moses and Stephen Austin and their
Colonist and the flood of settlers that soon followed in the 1800s found
yet another group of tribes. There are several interrelated reasons
for this. Diseases introduced by the first Europeans killed up to 80%
of the population of many tribes, reducing them to mere shadows of their
former glory and destroying their cultures and traditions. Often groups
of survivors would band together to form new bands. Many tribes simply
became extinct, often before any European described them. The first
European contact also closely coincided with the arrival of aggressive
and powerful tribes coming down from the Great Plains. The Apachean
tribes had began to settle in the Pan-handle just prior to Coronado's
arrival in 1541. After the Pueblo revolt of 1680 the southern plains
tribes acquired the horse in large numbers, they were then even more
aggressive and more formidable than before. Tribes in contact with the
French along the Missouri river and on the Mississippi river acquired
firearms. These better armed tribes expanded forcing other tribes south
and west. This created a domino effect. For example, the Apaches were
forced south into the Edwards Plateau area of central Texas by the Comache
and other plains tribes coming out of the north. This is were the Spanish
found them in the 1700s. By the time of the German settlers arrived
in the early and middle 1800s the Comanche were in control of the Edwards
Plateau and the Apaches were gone and the Tonkawa tribe had moved from
North East Texas into the central Texas region just east of the plateau.
This is why we have choosen to divide the tribes into time periods.
The other way to divide the tribes and bands is by region. Tribes and
bands tended to stay as long as they could in the physiographical environmental
zones that they were best adapted to exploit for food and shelter. Within
these physiographic zones bands and subgroups of the tribe each had
its own territory. Hunter-gatherer groups in the desert west and along
the coast would move seasonally to the best resources across large areas.
Tribes in east Texas with agriculture were sedentary, living in villages.
These Caddoan tribes supported large populations and exerted political
influence over large regions with multiple villages, usually in river
valleys.

THE FIRST CONTACTS.

The accounts of the first contacts are very valuable. They describe pristine
Indian tribes, people, customs, material goods, patterns of life, that
disappeared in a generation or two. DeSoto and Coronado, describe tribes
and bands that would be gone by the next recorded European contact. Even
by the time of Cabeza de Vaca, epidemics of European disease from slavers
and pirates contact had killed huge numbers of Indians, destroying whole
tribes and civilizations in the process. De Vaca recorded that the groups
he met were already stressed by unusal epidemics and deaths. These earliest
accounts are the only eye witness evidence we have of many tribes and
cultures.